Monday, June 23, 2008

BREAKING: George Carlin Has Died

George Carlin, the groundbreaking social satirist whose "Seven Dirty Words You Can't Say On Television" bit sparked a court case that lead all the way to the Supreme Court and a national discussion on indecency and censorship, has passed away last night in Los Angeles. He was 71.

Primarily a stage comic, Carlin would take an occasional screen role, but a film career was something he never actively pursued with any vigor. He made his film debut in 1968's With Six You Get Eggroll, but didn’t take another film role until 1976's hit comedy Car Wash.

Carlin's most popular screen role is probably that of Rufus in 1989's Bill And Ted’s Excellent Adventure and its 1991 sequel Bill And Ted’s Bogus Journey. As the time travelling mentor to a pair of flakey would-be rock stars, he epitomized the futuristic cool society that their music would ultimately create.

He also appeared in three films by Kevin Smith. As Cardinal Glick in 1999's Dogma, Carlin portrayed a Catholic clergyman with some rather offbeat ideas about modernizing the Church. For 2001's Jay And Silent Bob Strike Back, he cameoed briefly as a hitchhiker who gives the titular duo some unorthodox advice about hitching a lift. In 2004's Jersey Girl, he was a tough, but understanding, father to single parent Ben Affleck.

Carlin also appeared in the 1987's Outrageous Fortune and 2003's Scary Movie 3. For 1991's The Prince Of Tides, he took a rare dramatic turn. He lent his voice to the animated films Cars and Happily N'Ever After (both 2006). Carlin also appeared in the 2005 comedy documentary The Aristocrats.

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Tuesday, June 17, 2008

BREAKING: Dancer Cyd Charisse Has Died

Cyd Charisse, the dancer known for her long, athletic legs, has passed away earlier today. She was 86.

One of the great dancers from Hollywood's Golden Age, Charisse starred in numerous musicals at MGM Studios and is perhaps best remembered for her work with Gene Kelly in Singin' In The Rain (1952) and Brigadoon (1954) and Fred Astaire in The Band Wagon (1953) and Silk Stockings (1957). Kelly, impressed with her talent, often stated that he felt that the management of the studio never knew how to properly showcase the dancer to the best of her abilities.

Below is Charisse's memorable appearance with Gene Kelly in Singin' In The Rain.

Via USA Today.

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Stan Winston: A Tribute

Comparing Stan Winston's legacy to that of Cecil B. DeMille or Orson Welles might be viewed as some as being sacrilege. After all, special effects and make-up artistry is considered secondary to writing, acting or directing.

But Winston, like DeMille and Welles, was a creative genius who expanded the boundaries of his chosen field. And he excelled in the quality that makes any movie maker into a legend, he made the fantastic seem real. Winston might have lost his battle with multiple myeloma on Sunday, but Hollywood lost a true legend.

Born on April 7, 1946 in Richmond, Virginia, Winston studied art and sculpture at the University of Virginia. He came out to California in 1968 with the hopes of becoming an actor.

It is bizarre to think that if Hollywood would have been a little bit more receptive to his acting talents, his legacy might be quite a bit different. But, as it is, his road to building his legend began one year later when he became an apprentice at the makeup department at Walt Disney Studios.

Over the next 40 years, Winston developed his craft, broke out on his own and made a name for himself in the special effects world. He had one leg in the past and one leg in future, becoming a bridge from the stop-motion effects of a Ray Harryhausen and the computer generated imagery that is so prevalent today.

His multiple collaborations with James Cameron, Steven Spielberg, and Tim Burton not only helped enhance those creators' reputations, but also aided in creating the cultural landscape for a whole generation of moviegoers. We will take a look a several examples of Winston's creations and the impact they had on Hollywood history.

Terminator
A killer robot from the future has to be hard to design. If it looks silly, all sense of menace is lost. In the wrong hands, the Terminator endo skeleton could have turned the Terminator from a taut sci-fi thriller to a mock-worthy, Z-grade misfire.

Winston created a robot that was truly frightening. From the glowing red eyes, the head that resembles a shiny, metallic human skull, to the perpetual grin, the Terminator was almost as terrifying when being portrayed by Arnold Schwarzenegger as it was in its robotic form.

What makes it even scarier is the fact that the robot looks like it could really exist. It appears logical that a humanoid robot could look and function exactly like the T-100.

Aliens
Winston didn't design the Alien creatures for the franchise (That would be artist H.R. Giger) or work on Alien, but what he brought to the effects was enough to garner him his second Oscar nomination and his first win.

The characters had a lot more aliens to deal with in this movie, and Winston made them all come to life. Not only that, but he made the beasts seem like a serious threat to a troop of the toughest Marines Earth had to offer. Not only did the danger seem real, but the aliens did too. Again, without Winston's work, people would have considered Aliens a franchise killer instead of the rare sequel that might actually be better than the one that came before it.


Predator:
Winston was once again faced with the awesome task of creating an alien creature who was a threat to a group of military trained commandos. However, it was more difficult this time because one of the commandos was the Terminator himself, Arnold Schwarzenegger.

While we don't see the alien's face for most of the movie, when we do, the danger is made all too real. The creature was fearsomely ugly but still had a look of determination on its face that fit the character to a T.

The predator was part warrior, part gladiator and all hunter. And Winston brought all these qualities to life. Look to the right and then tell me that you don't believe that guy could be a menace to Arnold.

Edward Scissorhands
Granted, a great deal of the success of Tim Burton's misunderstood title character--a gentle soul perceived as a dangerous monster by the narrow minded townspeople--had to do with Johnny Depp's nuance performance.

However, I don't believe it is out of line to say that Stan Winston's artistry helped out quite a bit. The hands Winston created was a chaotic bouquet of sharp blades. They look evil and menacing. The other characters not being able to look beyond these weapons to see the tortured soul attached to them becomes all too believable.

Another effects guru might not have been able to bring Burton's vision of the character to life. Winston made it look simple.

Jurassic Park:
I am sure that many people in Hollywood's visual effects industry saw the advent of computer generated imagery as a death knell for the way they did business. Why pay to construct models or design effects when someone at a keyboard could take it farther than you could ever imagine?

Not Stan Winston. He adapted to the new reality in Hollywood and continued to thrive. He would design effects that would mash seamlessly with the CGI to make the experience more real for audiences and actors.

This film is an example of that. He made the long dead dinosaurs come back to life. No longer would they be drawings in a science book or a skeleton in a museum, they now could run after you and make you their lunch.

Interview with a Vampire
One of my friends is a big Anne Rice fan, especially of her vampire novels. I had the opportunity to go see this film with this friend as she saw it the first time. After the movie ended, I asked her what she thought of it.

She replied, "They have translucent skin!"

Apparently, in the Rice novels, vampires have opaque skin through which veins can be clearly seen.

The makeup work on this film might be a relatively minor addition to Winston's resume, but that comment by friend spoke volumes. His makeup work helped make the transition from page to screen that much easier, and. in the process, made a lot of hardcore Anne Rice fans happy.

Iron Man

Translating the garish costumes found in comic books to the screen is a dicey proposition. Few could pull it of, which means we often see major changes when comics are adapted to the screen.

Iron Man proved an especially tough challenge because his superhero suit was not made of cloth or spandex, it was made of iron and steel. In the wrong hands, it could look fake and unrealistic.

Once again, Winston succeeded where many others might have failed. The movie Iron Man armor was almost the exact mirror image of the comic book one. And the actual suits of armor Winston and his team created for the film helped add realism to the proceedings and worked hand in hand with the CGI to make the film's special effects believable.

These films listed only begin to scratch the surface of the mastery Stan Winston brought to the world of special effects. His nine Oscar nominations and three Oscar wins show the respect he has garnered from inside the community. If it wasn't for him, many summer blockbusters would seem lackluster, unbelievable situations would seem unrealistic, and the look and feel of modern movies would be greatly different. Hollywood has lost a legend in every sense of the word, and movie fans have lost someone who constantly sparked their imaginations.

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Monday, June 16, 2008

BREAKING: Stan Winston Has Died

Stan Winston, three time Academy Award winning special effects and makeup genius, has died last night.

AintItCool broke the story a little while ago, and his confirmed it.

Winston won Oscars for his make-up and visual effects work on Aliens, Terminator 2 and Jurassic Park. He received further nominations for Heartbeeps, Predator, Edward Scissorhands, Batman Returns, The Lost World and AI.

More recently, he had had develop the practical effects for Iron Man and was working on the upcoming Terminator Salvation film.

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Funnyman Harvey Korman Has Died

Funnyman Harvey Korman passed away yesterday afternoon in Los Angeles after suffering complications from the rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm four months ago. He was 81.

Korman won four Emmys for his work on the long running Carol Burnett Show. But it was his role as the fiendishly plotting politician Hedley Lamarr in Mel Brooks western spoof Blazing Saddles that is probably best remembered by film fans. Saddled with keeping the running gag about his character's name's proximity to actress Hedy Lamarr alive through the film, Korman brought an energy to every joke given to him by the script, delivering laugh after laugh. It's a shame that he didn't receive the Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor that Lamarr thought he deserved.

Korman would go on to work with Brooks on several more films including the Hitchcock parody High Anxiety and History Of The World, Part 1.

Korman also had numerous television and animation voice over roles to his credit.

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Breaking News: STAR TREK Composer Alexander Courage Has Died

Alexander Courage, the composer who wrote one of the most recognizable television theme songs ever for the series Star Trek has passed away in Palisades, California at the age of 88.

His passing on May 15th was reported late yesterday.

A composer whose career spanned radio, television and film, Courage's eight note brass fanfare that heralded the voyages of the starship Enterprise, were reprised through virtually all television and film iterations of the popular science fiction franchise.

As a composer and orchestrator, Courage worked on numerous films from the 1950s through the 1990s including Pagan Love Story (1950), Shake, Rattle & Rock! (1956), The Left Handed Gun (1958), The Poseidon Adventure (1972), Legend (1985), Hook (1991), Basic Instinct (1992), The Mummy (1999) and Hollow Man (2000). While working at MGM, he orchestrated numerous musicals including Annie Get Your Gun (1950), Show Boat (1951), Singin' In The Rain (1952), Oklahoma (1955), Gigi (1958), Hello Dolly (1969) and Fiddler On The Roof (1971).

Courage received two Academy Award nominations for his his adaptation of scores for 1963's The Pleasure Seekers and 1967's Doctor Dolittle.

Via Film Music Society.

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Monday, May 26, 2008

Academy Award winner Sydney Pollack dies.


CNN is reporting that Academy Award winning director Sydney Pollack has succumbed to his battle with cancer. He was 73.
Look for a full obituary to come in the next several days.

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Friday, May 16, 2008

In Remembrance: John Phillip Law

When one thinks of the pop-art inspired psychedelic films of the 1960s, inevitably John Phillip Law comes to mind for his roles in two of the genre's best- Barbarella and Danger: Diabolik. Beyond that, Law stood out in such films as The Russians Are Coming, The Russians Are Coming, Death Rides A Horse and The Golden Voyage Of Sinbad. He also had the dubious honor of appearing in director Otto Preminger's two worse films- Hurry Sundown and Skidoo.

Law passed away Tuesday, May 14 at his home in Los Angeles. He was 70.

For more on Law's career, see our In Remembrance piece here.

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Wednesday, May 7, 2008

In Remembrance: Kate Phillips, Joy Page, Bebe Barron, Julie Ege

We take a moment to stop and remember the careers of four women who made their own impact on films and movie history who have recently passed away. (Click on each name for additional information on their careers.)

Julie Ege- (April 29) The Norwegian beauty queen and Bond girl who found herself typecast in numerous 1970s British sex farces has passed away at age 64.

Bebe Barron- (April 20) One half of the composing team who created the electronic music for the 1956 science-fiction classic Forbidden Planet has passed away at age 81.

Joy Page- (April 18) The actress who got her start playing the young Bulgarian newlywed who turns to Humphrey Bogart for help in Casablanca, has passed away at age 83.

Kate Phillips- (April 18) The actress who appeared billed as Kay Linaker throughout most of her Hollywood career and who wrote the classic 1958 film The Blob has passed away at age 94.

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Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Breaking News: Ollie Johnston Has Died

Ollie Johnston, the last surviving member of Walt Disney's Nine Old Men, passed away yesterday, April 14, 2008 in Sequim, Washington. He was 95.

As a member of the group that studio founder Walt Disney had dubbed his Nine Old Men, Johnston helped to animate the studio's most famous features, from Snow White And The Seven Dwarves (1937) to The Rescuers (1977).

Johnston specialized in animating comic villain characters, bringing to life Mr. Smee in Peter Pan (1953), Cinderella's Stepsisters, the District Attorney in The Adventures of Ichabod and Mr. Toad (1949), and Robin Hood's nemesis, Prince John. However, he also animated non-villainous characters such as Alice in Alice In Wonderland (1951), the three Fairy Godmothers from Sleeping Beauty (1953), the penguin waiters from Mary Poppins (1964) and The Jungle Book's Baloo.

Johnston often worked with his friend and fellow "Old Man" Frank Thomas. The two co-authored the animation textbook The Illusion Of Life, which stands as a record of many of the techniques developed during the early days of the Disney studio. Director Brad Bird featured Johnston and Thomas in cameoes in his films The Iron Giant and The Incredibles.

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Sunday, April 6, 2008

Academy Award Winner Charlton Heston passes away at 84

USA Today is reporting, and it has been confirmed by CNN, that movie actor Charlton Heston has passed away. He was 84.

He received an Academy Award in 1960 for his work in Ben-Hur and was awarded the Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award by the Academy in 1978.

Heston starred in over 100 movies, most notably The Ten Commandments, Peer Gynt, El Cid, Earthquake, and Planet of the Apes, but was known most recently as president of the National Rifle Association and an outspoken advocate for the right to bear arms.

Cause of death is as yet unknown, but Heston revealed he was diagnosed with Alzheimer's Disease in 2002.

You can read more on Heston's career here.

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Arthur C Clarke Goes On His Final Odyssey

Arthur C Clarke, the noted Grandmaster of literary science fiction who collaborated with filmmaker Stanley Kubrick to create the landmark film 2001: A Space Odyssey, has passed away in Sri Lanka early this morning. He was 90.

As a member of the British Interplanetary Society starting in the 1930s, Clarke became known as a writer of both science fiction and non-fiction scientific papers. His 1945 monograph "Extra-terrestrial Relays" laid out the principals required for a system of communication satellites in geostationary orbit. A decade later he would encourage the United States Weather Bureau to look at developing the idea of using satellite imagery to help forecast the weather.

In 1964, Clarke began collaborating with director Stanley Kubrick on a science-fiction film. Using Clarke’s short story "The Sentinel" as a starting point, the two developed the storyline and script for what would become 2001: A Space Odyssey. Clarke would write about the collaboration and the different drafts and story ideas that went into the developing script in his book Lost Worlds Of 2001. He would also novelize the film, though his version would set the film’s climactic encounter with the mysterious Monolith in the orbit of Saturn, not Jupiter. Clarke would change this detail when he wrote the novel sequels 2010: Odyssey Two, 2061: Odyssey Three and 3001: Final Odyssey.

Clarke also collaborated with writer/director Peter Hyams on the development of the film version of 2010 in 1984. As Clarke was living in Sri Lanka and Hyams was in Los Angeles, the two communicated via newly available computer modem technology. Clarke would write about the experience in his book The Odyssey File- The Making Of 2010.

The 1994 film Trapped In Space would be based on Clarke’s short story "Breaking Strain," though the author had no input into the production.

In more recent years, director David Fincher has been trying to develop a film version of Clarke’s 1972 novel Rendezvous With Rama.

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Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Breaking News: Oscar Winner Anthony Minghella Has Died

The BBC is reporting that Academy Award winning director Anthony Minghella has died. He was 54. His death was confirmed by his agent, though no further details were forthcoming.

Minghella won the Academy Award for directing the romantic epic The English Patient in 1996. He was also nominated for an Oscar for penning the adaptation of the novel The Talented Mr. Ripley in 1999.

Other films of Minghella’s include Truly, Madly, Deeply and Cold Mountain.

From 2003 forward, he served as chairman of the British Film Insitute.

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Thursday, March 13, 2008

In Remembrance: Wald, Rosenman, Raab, Watkin, Shum

Two Academy Award winners, an Oscar nominee, a producer and a Hong Kong icon are all remembered.

Malvin Wald- (March 6) The screenwriter whose script for The Naked City created the police procedural genre has passed away at age 90.

Leonard Rosenman- (March 4) The two time Academy Award winning composer has passed away at age 83.

Max Raab- (February 21) The clothing merchant who would become a producer on A Clockwork Orange has passed away at age 82.

David Watkin- (February 19) The cinematographer who won an Academy Award for his work on Out Of Africa has passed away on February 19, 2008 in Brighton, England. He was 82.

Lydia Shum- (February 19) The Hong Kong actress who had remained a popular public figure for nearly five decades has passed away at age 60.

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Sunday, February 24, 2008

Ben Chapman, The BLACK LAGOON's CREATURE Has Died

Ben Chapman, the six-foot five-inch tall actor who played the towering Gill-man in the 1954 classic The Creature From The Black Lagoon passed away on Thursday on Honolulu, Hawaii. He was 79.

According to the Honolulu Advertiser, the actor had been suffering from heart and breathing problems over the past few months.

For more on Chapman's life and career, see FilmBuffOnLine's In Remembrance piece here.

I first saw Chapman in The Creature as a kid at a birthday party for another kid in the neighborhood. His dad had gotten an 8mm reel of highlights from the film and screened it at the party, projecting it in the backyard onto a bedsheet. The reel was in anaglyph 3D and we kids loved seeing the Gill-man swimming right off the sheet into the summer night at us.

When I met Chapman 25 years later at a Chiller Theater show in New Jersey, I recounted the story to him and he laughed, quickly pointing out that the swimming scenes for the Gill-man were all handled by former Olympian Ricou Browning. We did talk for a few minutes about his land-based work in the costume for the film before I made way for other fans who wanted to chat with the actor. But in the brief moment, Chapman came off as a fun loving guy who acted like a goodwill ambassador on behalf of the Gill-man to fans everywhere. A favorite on the convention circuit for his easy-going attitude, he will be missed.

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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

In Remembrance: DoQui, Ichikawa, Lopez

  • Robert DoQui- (February 9) The actor best known to genre fans as the gruff Sgt. Reed in the three Robocop films has passed away at age 74.
  • Kon Ichikawa- (February 13) The Japanese director of the powerful anti-war films Fires On The Plains and The Burmese Harp has passed away at age 92.
  • Perry Lopez- (February 14) The character actor who appeared in Chinatown as the tough-as-nails police lieutenant Lou Escobar has passed away at age 78.

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Sunday, February 10, 2008

Roy Scheider Passes

Roy Scheider, forever immortalized in the minds of a generation of moviegoers as the small town police chief suddenly confronted with the need for a bigger boat in 1975's blockbuster Jaws, has passed away earlier today in Little Rock, Arkansas. He was 75.

According to a report in the New York Times, Scheider had been suffering from multiple myeloma for several years, and died of complications from a staph infection.

Although perhaps best remembered for his role as Police Chief Martin Brody in Steven Spielberg's blockbuster thriller Jaws and the first of the shark filom's sequels, Scheider had already built a solid reputation as an actor through his work in films like Klute, The French Connection (both 1971) and The Seven Ups (1973).

Scheider received a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award nomination for his French Connection performance as the more restrained partner of driven police officer "Popeye" Doyle, played by Gene Hackman. He received a second Academy Award nomination, this time for Best Actor, for his 1979 performance of the driven Broadway director in Bob Fosse's semi-autobiographical All That Jazz.

He also had noteable performances in Sorcerer (1977), Still Of The Night (1982), Blue Thunder (1983), 2010 (1984), Russia House (1990), Naked Lunch (1991) and Romeo Is Bleeding (1993).

More recently Scheider had contributed narration to many documentaries, including The Shark Is Still Working, a look at the troubled production of Jaws. He provided voice work to the documentary Chicago 10, which is due for release in two weeks.

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